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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Mexico Claims Two Drug Lords Out Of Action
Title:US CO: Mexico Claims Two Drug Lords Out Of Action
Published On:2002-03-10
Source:Pueblo Chieftain (CO)
Fetched On:2008-01-24 17:36:56
MEXICO CLAIMS TWO DRUG LORDS OUT OF ACTION

MEXICO CITY - Soldiers raided a house in central Mexico on Saturday and
captured the alleged leader of a drug cartel accused of spreading terror
across much of the country. They also found evidence that his brother, the
gang's alleged co-leader, was dead.

With Benjamin Arellano Felix under arrest and his brother Ramon presumed
dead, "the cartel of the Arellanos has been completely dismantled,"
Attorney General Ramon Macedo de la Concha told a news conference.

"It seems that this is a great triumph for justice," President Vicente Fox
said as he congratulated the army and the Justice Department.

U.S. and Mexican authorities say the brothers led a Tijuana-based operation
that smuggled tons of cocaine, amphetamines and marijuana into the United
States and murdered hundreds of people over the past 15 years.

"We've been seeking his apprehension for years," U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administrator Asa Hutchinson said Saturday of Benjamin Arellano Felix. "It
was our top priority."

Ramon Arellano Felix is on the FBI's 10 most wanted list, with a $2 million
reward for his capture.

Still, the breakup of other major gangs in the past has had little or no
long-term effect on the flow of illegal drugs into the United States.

"Tomorrow there will be another substituting for them for one simple
reason: While there is consumption, demand in the United States, there will
be drug trafficking in Mexico," said Tijuana journalist Jesus Blancornelas
in an interview with Mexico's Formato 21 radio station.

Benjamin Arellano Felix was captured without gunfire at about 1 a.m. as
police raided a house in an upper-middle class neighborhood of Puebla, a
city 65 miles east of Mexico City, Mexican Defense Secretary Ricardo
Clemente Vega Garcia said at a news conference.

He said an altar to Ramon Arellano Felix was found in the house, suggesting
he was killed a Feb. 10 police shootout in Mazatlan.

Officials released a videotape of Benjamin confirming his brother's death
and Macedo said other new evidence confirmed it, though the government
statement issued at the news conference merely called the death a
"presumption."

Mexican and U.S. officials have been awaiting the result of DNA and other
tests before formally declaring Ramon Arellano Felix dead.

The body of the man killed in Mazatlan, identified as Jorge Perez Lopez,
was retrieved from a funeral home a day after the shootout by a man
claiming to be his cousin.

In Puebla, neighbors said Benjamin Arellano Felix had been living quietly
and unostentatiously since August on a small, gated street called La
Cerrada Escondida - "The Hidden Cul de Sac."

A handful of local reporters visited the yellow house early Saturday and
found a few packed suitcases left behind. Neighbors later ordered a
security guard to close off the street.

Prosecutors say the Arellano Felix group rose from remnants of the
Guadalajara-based Pacific Cartel, run by Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo until
his arrest in 1989.

They quickly seized control of operations in Tijuana and waged a bloody war
against former colleagues in the Pacific Cartel while allegedly paying
millions of dollars in bribes each year.

Benjamin, who is to turn 50 on Tuesday, allegedly handled finances and
strategy while Ramon, 37, allegedly oversaw a murderous security and
enforcement operation whose victims included rivals, farmers, police and
innocent bystanders - including Roman Catholic Cardinal Juan Jesus Posadas
Ocampo.

One DEA report said the gang was believed to have killed at least 300 people.

Posadas was shot to death in a fusillade of bullets at the Guadalajara
airport in 1993. Prosecutors say gang members confused his car with that of
their target, rival drug gang leader Joaquin Guzman Loera.

In 1996, gunmen shot a state prosecutor more than 100 times outside his
home and then drove their van over his body dozens of times. Several other
siblings also are alleged to have roles in the gang. They include Francisco
Javier, 32; Eduardo, 46; and Francisco Rafael, 52, who is imprisoned on
drug and arms charges as well as for complicity in Ocampo's slaying.

Vega said Benjamin Arellano Felix had been taken to "a safe location" in
Mexico City. His wife and a child were found at the house and were not
arrested.

He said Arellano Felix had been using the alias of "Licenciado Sanchez."
"Licenciado" is a common honorific here, referring to a person's
professional degree, Vega said.

Also captured was Manuel Martinez Gonzalez, who Mexican officials said was
an aide to the brothers involved in laundering drug money and protecting
the gang leaders.

On Friday, U.S. officials announced the arrest of 22 people in Denver, San
Diego and the Minneapolis area believed linked to the Arellano Felix group.
Charges included conspiracy to distribute and possess cocaine.d conspiracy
to distribute and possess cocaine.
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